CAKE
B.O.T and the BEASTIES
You must be logged in and have an active subscription to view the video. Login. Not yet registered? Register.
B.O.T. and the BEASTIES (50 x 5’) introduces pre-schoolers to the comic adventures and misadventures of a loveable robot called B.O.T. (Beastie Observation Transmitter) as he discovers new worlds and an assortment of bizarre beasties that inhabit them. B.O.T. must collect data on the comically unpredictable beasties and while his mission is never easy, it is always fun! Strong visual comedy, playfulness and invention are at the heart of the show with each episode offering wonderful storytelling as B.O.T. embarks on a hilarious beastie journey of discovery!
TVKIDS
CAKE to Rep B.O.T. and the BEASTIES
The content you are trying to access is only available to members.
Close and Continue
Sign Up Now For Daily Kids Updates
TV Kids Daily provides updates on the children s media business, including news about the latest shows, sales deals, licensing and merchandising trends, developments in digital media and more.
Name
About TV Kids
TV Kids delivers comprehensive information and analysis on the world of children s programming. It is produced by the same team behind World Screen, the leading source of information for the international media business. Read more here.
Cake takes on BOT & the Beasties c21media.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from c21media.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In 1960, Fergus Ryan s father brought him, aged 12, to Dublin Airport to see the first Boeing 707 land. Ten years later, Ryan, an Aer Lingus pilot, was flying them. Then, having retired from the skies, he got a first class honours degree in Theology at Trinity College Dublin, but he always drew and sketched and in the 2000s he began to paint professionally as I wished .
His father taught him to look, to notice things , and Dublin was my visual theatre : the GPO s Ionic pillars, Bank of Ireland had both Ionic and Corinthian, the Custom House, Doric; the figures on the O Connell Monument. Jusepe de Ribera s wrinkled Saint Onuphrius in the National Gallery.
Toowoomba Carnival of Flowers
COVID-19 format blueprint for change for Australia’s leading event
Proof that there’s a silver lining to everything, the multi-award-winning Toowoomba Carnival of Flowers (TCOF) received recommendation from Toowoomba Regional Council’s Environment and Community Services committee meeting this week, that in 2021, the 10-day celebration will be extended throughout all of September, following the success achieved this year under COVID-19 restrictions.
TCOF 2020 was the first free, unfenced, outdoor, major tourism event in Australia to be delivered during COVID-19 restrictions, and saw more than 200,000 visitors from all over Queensland celebrate a joyous and petal-filled experience.
Toowoomba Regional Council Mayor Paul Antonio gave his support towards the dates being changed from the usual 10-day format, to run from September 1 to 30 in 2021.